AC/DC and the Gospel of Rock & Roll

Thirty-four years after he first put on the schoolboy uniform, Angus Young and his blue-collar bandmates return with their best album since ‘Back in Black’

AC/DC singer Brian Johnson perches on the edge of a sofa in a New York hotel room with a blank look on his face, mumbling to himself in a grainy whisper, his head and shoulders drooping with exhaustion. There is nothing wrong with him. Johnson, a robust man who is built like a bear and who talks in a booming growl, is doing his imitation of AC/DC guitarist Angus Young on tour, backstage just before showtime.

“It’s amazing, watching him in the dress­ing room,” Johnson says with a raspy cackle through his thick northern-England accent. “He can be totally knackered, in the middle of a long stretch of shows, sitting there with a cigarette and a cup of tea.” Johnson goes into that gnomish slouch. “Then it’s, ‘Twenty minutes, boys.’ He gets up, hardly a word, disappears around a corner – and comes back in those clothes. He’s got a fag in his mouth, a jaunty look on his face, his guitar slung on him.